1957 Aqaba Valetta accident

On 17 April 1957, a twin-engined Vickers Valetta C.1 transport aircraft, serial number VW832, of 84 Squadron, Royal Air Force crashed and was destroyed after departing from Aqaba Airport in Jordan following wing failure due to turbulence. The crash is the deadliest air disaster in the history of Jordan.[1]

1957 Aqaba Valetta accident
A Vickers Valetta C.2 similar to the accident aircraft
Accident
Date17 April 1957
SummaryStructural failure in clear-air turbulence
Site20 miles from Aqaba Airport, Jordan
Aircraft
Aircraft typeVickers Valetta C.1
OperatorRoyal Air Force
RegistrationVW832
Flight originAqaba Airport, Jordan
DestinationRAF Habbaniya, Iraq
Occupants27
Passengers24
Crew3
Fatalities27
Survivors0

Accident

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The Valetta was returning British Army troops from Jordan to the United Kingdom following the end of the Anglo-Jordanian Treaty.[2] The Valetta had three crew and most of the 24 passengers were from the 10th Royal Hussars.[3] The aircraft departed Aqaba at 10:23, bound for a stop at Mafraq Airport in North Jordan and then RAF Habbaniya in Iraq.[4] At about 10:30 the aircraft hit turbulence causing the wing to fail, the aircraft spun into the ground 20 miles North North West of Aqaba, it burned and was destroyed killing all on board.[4]

The bodies were returned to RAF Habbaniya and were buried with full military honours in the RAF/CWGC cemetery on 27 April 1957.[5] The bodies lie in Plot 5 Row B Graves 1–7. The personnel who died were 3 RAF crew, 18 10th Hussars troops, 5 REME soldiers and 1 Army Catering Corps soldier.

Investigation

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The Board of Inquiry found the accident was due to the failure of the port main spar of the outer wing which had resulted in the disintegration of the wing round the fracture and damage to the rear fuselage and tail.[4] The board also said it found that spar failure was due to over-stressing and they suggested this was due to the extreme air turbulence which was known to have existed in the area at the time.[4] The board said they had found no sign of a fatigue failure.[4]

References

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Notes

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  1. ^ Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network
  2. ^ "R.A.F. Crash in Jordan – 22 Soldiers and Crew Killed". News in Brief. The Times. No. 53819. London. 18 April 1957. col C, p. 10.
  3. ^ "Akaba Air Crash Death Roll 27". The Times. No. 53820. London. 20 April 1957. col B, p. 11.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Aircraft Accident, Jordan". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 28 June 1957. Retrieved 13 August 2011.
  5. ^ RAF Form 540 AIR29/1320 The National Archives, Kew, London.